
Don’t Auto-Pay a Sudden Escrow Increase Until You Read This
If your mortgage payment just jumped by hundreds of dollars, you’re probably wondering if your servicer messed up — or if you’re stuck with it.
Here’s the truth:
Some escrow increases are legitimate. Others are avoidable.
Before you accept a higher payment, it’s worth understanding why escrow changes, what to check, and what options you actually have. A little clarity now can prevent a year of overpaying.
What an Escrow Increase Really Means
Escrow is simply a holding account your mortgage servicer uses to pay:
Property taxes
Homeowners insurance
Each year, your servicer runs an escrow analysis. They compare:
What they expected your taxes and insurance to cost
What they actually paid
That review leads to one of two outcomes:
Escrow shortage: Not enough was collected → the difference must be made up
Escrow overage: Too much was collected → you may receive a refund
The real shock happens when a shortage from last year and higher projected costs for the coming year hit at the same time. That’s when payments jump fast.
The 3 Most Common Reasons Escrow Payments Spike
1. Property tax changes
This is especially common after:
County reassessments
Losing a homestead exemption
Converting a home to a rental
A purchase or title change
Your servicer doesn’t explain why taxes changed — they just plug in the new number.
2. Insurance increases
If you live in Florida, this probably isn’t a surprise.
Insurance premiums can jump significantly from one year to the next, and those increases often show up suddenly inside escrow with very little explanation.
3. Servicer errors
Yes, this happens more than people think.
Common issues include:
Using the wrong tax bill
Applying an outdated insurance premium
Missing exemptions
Misapplied refunds
An official-looking letter doesn’t always mean the math is right.
How to Check the Math Yourself
You don’t need to be a “numbers person” to sanity-check escrow.
Pull these three documents:
Your escrow analysis letter
Your county property tax bill
Your homeowners insurance declarations page
Add up the annual tax amount and annual insurance premium from the source documents. Then compare that total to what the servicer is projecting for the year ahead.
If the numbers don’t line up, you have a valid reason to ask for:
An explanation
A correction
A re-analysis
Your Two Options When There’s an Escrow Shortage
Most homeowners don’t realize they usually have a choice.
You can typically:
Pay the shortage upfront, or
Spread it out over the next 12 months
One option protects your cash on hand.
The other keeps your monthly payment lower.
Neither is “wrong.”
What is a mistake is accepting the default without understanding the trade-off.
Prefer a Walkthrough? Watch the Video
If escrow statements make your eyes glaze over, I recorded a short video that walks through this step by step in plain English.
In the video, I explain:
Why escrow payments jump even when you never missed a payment
The most common tax and insurance triggers
How to audit an escrow analysis letter line by line
How to decide between paying a shortage upfront or spreading it out
🎥 Watch the full video here:
https://youtu.be/eQJzgX9Kjrk
Sometimes it’s easier to see the numbers than just read about them.
Final Thought
Escrow increases feel personal — but they’re usually mechanical.
The real risk isn’t the increase itself.
It’s accepting it without understanding it.
A 10-minute review can save you a year of unnecessary stress and overpaying.
If you want clarity on how this applies to your situation, the first step is a conversation — not pressure.
👉 https://interconnectmortgage.com/calendar
Disclaimer
This content is for educational purposes only and not a commitment to lend.
Interconnect Mortgage — NMLS #1720882.
Check licensing at NMLS Consumer Access.
Toni Taylor Gozza
Mortgage broker licensed in Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina
Helping homeowners, self-employed borrowers, and investors navigate smart financing decisions for 34+ years.
